It's Washington Capitals hockey, all day, all night, all the time . . . or when I get around to it

Saturday, December 20, 2008

The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!! -- Caps vs. Flyers, December 20th

The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!

It’s a winter’s day in Philly, when a child’s visions turn to cheese steaks and booing Santa. That’s right, it’s Caps-Flyers. And speaking of a child’s vision, we had an opportunity to sit down with one of the iconic kids of the Christmas season, who happens to be quite the hockey fan, to talk hockey and Christmas…Ralphie.

Ralphie, nice of you to let us stop by in this festive yuletide season. What are you hoping for this Christmas?

“Same thing I hope for every year…I want an Official Red Ryder Carbine-Action Two-Hundred-Shot Range Model Air Rifle!”

Now what’s up with that? What is the charm of the ol’ Red Ryder?

“To tell you the truth, I don’t really want it, but my old man tells me to ask for it every year. He’s the one who wants it, just to take shots at the Bumpus’ hounds.”

What do you want?

“Really?...I could go for a case of that Palmolive soap…it has a nice, piquant after-dinner flavor - heavy, but with a touch of mellow smoothness. Or maybe another one of those lamps…there’s nothing like the soft glow of electric sex gleaming in the window.”

I understand you’re quite a hockey fan. Who is favorite team?

“The Flyers, of course.”

Why is that?

“Because I can go to a game and say ‘crissin’ friggin’ sonuvamivvin’ divvin’ bliggin’’ and no one thinks anything of it.”

Really, I would have thought that would be your brother, Randy. What about today’s game…you have a pick?

“The Flyers…they’re 17-5-3 since that awful 0-3-3 start, 10-2-2 at home since that start…Simon Gagne, Mike Richards, Jeff Carter…it’s a strong team.”

Yeah, but you still have Martin Biron and Antero Niittymaki in goal.”

“Ohhh fu-u-u-dge!”

Well, Ralphie didn’t say fudge, as you probably expected. As for the Flyers though, they are a strong team coming into this game, as the numbers suggest…

Some things are clear right away if you’re a Caps fan…

- You want this to be a “let ‘em play” game. If it is one, the Caps look to be the better even-strength team. If it becomes an exchange of power plays, both power play groups are strong, but Philly has the superior penalty kill…maybe. The Caps did kill off 18 in a row in a four game stretch from December 7th through December 13th, but they were only 7-for-10 in their last two games (70 percent). On the other hand, Philly has allowed power play goals in each of their last six games, killing off only 22 of 30 (73.3 percent).

- Neither team wants to fall behind. The Caps lead the league in winning percentage when scoring first, and the Flyers have the fewest losses in regulation in the league when doing so.

- Neither team can be said to be “defense-oriented,” based on the numbers, but one thing does stand out. Of the four goaltenders who have logged significant time this year for the two clubs, only one has a save percentage better than .905 and has a GAA better than 2.80 – Brent Johnson (.920, 2.46).

If you’re going to play the Flyers, bring a whip and a chair. Ornery is what they’ve been over the years, and ornery is what they are. Their 32 fighting majors puts the Flyers third in the NHL. It is entirely consistent with their recent history, having been fourth in fighting majors last year and tied for sixth in 2006-2007 after “slipping” to 19th in the first year back after the lockout. Nine Flyers have dropped the gloves this year, led by Riley Cote (nine) and Arron Asham (eight) in their 32 bouts. By way of comparison, the Caps have had a total of ten bouts this year (29th), half of those authored by Donald Brashear. Look for the Flyers to establish a “fistcheck” as opposed to a “forecheck.”

Individually, the story for the Flyers is the return of Simon Gagne to the ranks of top scorers. After losing two-thirds of last season as a result of a series of concussions, Gagne is tied for eighth in scoring (16-21-37) and is a plus-19 for his efforts. Four of those goals are of the shorthanded variety and another four having come on the power play. He is clearly dangerous in all situations and especially so against the Caps. Gagne is 16-14-30, +6, and four game-winners in 28 career games against Washington.

Mike Richards is tied with Gagne for that eighth spot in the scoring rankings (13-24-37), with three power play and four shorthanded goals of his own. To that, he can add three game-winners. He is 3-6-9, +6 in ten career games against the Caps and is coming in hot. Before being held off the score sheet in a 5-2 loss to Montreal on Thursday, Richards had an eight-game points streak (7-8-15, +4).

The surprise of sorts, though, might be Jeff Carter, who finds himself second to Thomas Vanek in goal-scoring. His 22 goals is closing in on his career best (29) that he had last year. Like teammates Gagne and Richards, he is dangerous in all situations, netting six of those goals on the power play and another three shorthanded.

By now you’re asking, “what’s with all the shorthanded goals?” Well, the Flyers lead the league by a wide margin (12, to seven for runners-up San Jose and the Islanders). In fact, they are closing in on the total that led the league last year (18, by Ottawa) after only 31 games.

The Flyers also have scoring balance by position, having realized 64 points from the defense this season. Kimmo Timonen leads that group (3-17-20) with Braydon “How do you like Alexei Zhitnik now?” Coburn not far behind (3-10-13).

In goal, things are iffy. The pair of Martin Biron and Antero Niittymaki narrowly avoid being both “second page” goalies in the NHL.com statistics. Niittymaki is 29th in GAA (2.84), while Biron is 34th (2.95). Niittymaki is tied for 26th in save percentage (.905), while Biron is tied for 31st (.900…ok, he has good company in Evgeni Nabokov and Miika Kiprusoff). Niittymaki has allowed five goals in two of his last three appearances, and Biron hasn’t allowed fewer than three since shutting out Buffalo on November 21st, a span of eight appearances. Oddly, he has allowed exactly three in seven of those eight appearances. At least he’s consistent. He’s also out with the flu.

The Peerless Players to Ponder

Philadelphia: Mike Knuble

You’ve got to think this will be a high-scoring game. You’ve also got to think that the big three for the Flyers will make their presence felt. But if this is a scoring contest, the Flyers could use some additional support, and that’s where Knuble comes in. He could be especially valuable using his big frame (6’3”, 230) to get collect some garbage. The Caps do not have a particularly physical defense, especially with John Erskine out. Expect Knuble to be parked in front of the Caps net most of the day.

Washington: Tomas Fleischmann

Street fights are things a player like Alex Ovechkin thrives upon. He has 12 goals in 12 career games against the Flyers. But the Flyers might be expected to make a statement – a hard one – on a player like Fleischmann, who is not as gifted in fighting through the noise. Fleischmann netted his career high 11th goal in Thursday’s win over St. Louis, his first goal since netting one against Florida on December 2nd. If he can add to that, now that he’s healthy again, it could signal a good day for the Caps.

Going into Philly is always a test. It is a throwback to the days when divisions had names, not points on a compass (oh, how we long for a return to that). The crowd, the style – they can be intimidating. But the last time the Caps visited Philadelphia, they spotted the Flyers two goals in Game 6 of the first round of the playoffs before roaring back with four of their own in a 4-2 win. They can handle it…

2 comments:

PP: Great article as always, hope your prognostication is on - 6 in a row would be the longest streak so far this season for Gabby and the boys - sure wish Semin and Feds were in the lineup. It'll be a long day for Poti and Green. Hope ShaMo brings his A-Game so your predeiction on Knuble isn't too dead on.

The other stuff

Pictures, logos, and the occasional quotes used here are the intellectual property of other folks (unless otherwise noted) of considerably more productive imagination than the author of the original stuff read here, which is our very own.